Today, we’re bringing all this beta goodness to the stable channel so that it’s available to all Chrome users. We’re particularly excited to bring Chrome for Mac and Linux out of beta, and introduce Chrome’s first stable release for Mac and Linux users. You can read more about the Mac and Linux stable releases on the Google Mac and Chromium blogs respectively.

Today’s stable release also comes with a host of new features. You’ll be able to synchronize not only bookmarks across multiple computers, but also browser preferences -- including themes, homepage and startup settings, web content settings, preferred languages, and even page zoom settings. Meanwhile, for avid extensions users, you can enable each extension to work in incognito mode through the extensions manager.

In recent weeks, we’ve been beta-testing Adobe Flash Player integration into Chrome. While Flash Player integration in the browser is not included by default in today’s stable release, we’re excited to enable this feature with the full release of Flash Player (version 10.1) soon.

If you’re already using Chrome for Windows, Mac or Linux, you’ll be auto-updated to this latest release soon. You can also try out these new features on our speedy browser now, by downloading Chrome from google.com/chrome.

Chrome Robotics Blog

Welcome to the Chrome Robotics Blog. We are here for two things, Videos about Robots and Google Chrome. We're almost fed up with the Robots. Chrome Robotics is a blog about Google Chrome, Google Chromium Operating System, Financial News concerning Google and it's competitors, Speculation about the Future and Strange Videos about Robots. Because of the technological innovation of advanced video game development, console and game news will also play an integral role in entertaining readers of this blog. Check back often for relevant information about the future, the direction of several computing based nations and technology focused companies. Thank you for reading and or watching.